This document is designed to further educate justice system professionals about Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and call attention to key issues surrounding medication assisted treatment (MAT), the evidence that underlies treatment types, best practices, and legal implications. Click link below to read document.
A handful of states are experimenting with a monthly injection that could help addicted inmates stay clean after they are released from prison. Proponents of the injection point to a few successful field trials, while skeptics question its effectiveness long-term, as well as its $1,000 per shot price point.
Vivitrol, also known as extended-release naltrexone, is currently being used in prison systems in Illinois, Vermont, Wyoming and Wisconsin on a small scale, the Associated Press reports. Michigan is also offering the drug to parolees who commit small crimes if addiction is the reason for their new offense. The Federal Bureau of Prisons ran a successful field trial in Texas, which it plans to expand next year.